Don't want to get stiffed by a NFL starting RB? Don't be a waiter.
I'm seriously getting sick of people using the Internet to be a "victim" and try to shame others. It's pathetic.
I love that people are piling it on the establishment for doing this.

Don't want to get stiffed by a NFL starting RB? Don't be a waiter.
I'm seriously getting sick of people using the Internet to be a "victim" and try to shame others. It's pathetic.
I love that people are piling it on the establishment for doing this.

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I can think of two times in the last decade where I didn't leave a normal (15 percent or more) tip.

One time I wrote "Bad service" on the tip line. The other time I wrote "rude waitress" in the tip line. Both circumstances were beyond extreme.

I said when this was brought up on the football thread - I've been to PYT a few times and the service has been consistently bad. I still gave 15% because that's my low end unless the service is really heinous, but I can definitely see how service would be bad enough there to warrant a small tip.

Why not shame them? You go out in public, don't be afraid of the scrutiny. You have the desire to share in the establishment's offerings, you get judged on how you act.

The key question is "what is your expectation of privacy" when you enter a public dining establishment? Hint: very low.

As a former server, its a wonderful opportunity to learn how to get along with varying people (my memorable exps., Jane Fonda, Mark Eaton and Robert Reed). Getting stiffed should not be an option unless you've exhausted all other avenues.

No, this is not Buscemi in Reservoir Dogs, you do not get to say a tip is "extra" because the norm is to tip, its understood when you walk in. You don't like it? Go find a place with a walk up ordering station and pick up your own food.

Is tipping an American thing? I ask because of the four countries I've lived in, Americans are the only ones who tip. Even in countries where they're told tips aren't expected, they still do it, and now travel industry people expect it from Americans and people whom they think are Americans.

As recently as four days ago, I, as an American on a mini-cruise, got blamed for increasing people's expectations of tips from white people. (In Vietnam, from a New Zealander.) The tip buckets were plunked out in full site and the crew, which had gone missing, suddenly reappeared bearing huge smiles.

I know to some degree it's done in other countries, but it seems to be more demanded from Americans. Is that because we started it? I've no idea, but the more I travel, the more it does seem to be an American thing.